Night Life
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Rebecca Harris
* EDITOR’S NOTE: Where our summer’s WEEKEND WANDERER column explored
outdoor activities in the Newport-Mesa area, fall brings us inside the
places where locals spend their “off” time in NIGHT LIFE.
Done with work and looking for a cheap, no-frills draft beer? A hot place
to party with Orange County fraternity boys on a weeknight? Bistro 201 is
probably not your ideal destination.
Happy Hour at the quietly elegant Newport Beach bar and restaurant
attracts aging yuppies and middle-aged, upper-middle-class professionals.
From the valet parking stations outside to the interior’s shaded modern
decor, the place beckons those with money, time and an appreciation for
luxury.
Perched on the coast, the bar draws the setting sun through 14 panes of
full-length windows, bathing Happy Hour customers in a warm glow. From
most seats in the restaurant, the harbor’s moored sailboats are visible.
The scene is semiformal, reserved. Hushed conversations flourish amid
ringing cell phones muted by satin-lined suit pockets, and the soft
clinking of glasses.
On a recent evening, a saxophonist proffered a continuous stream of
soothing, Kenny G-type tunes and seemed to appreciate the loud applause
led by the bartender after each number. The reserved customers did their
best to ignore the hint.
Drinking is serious business at Bistro 201. None of that raucous, heady
neighborhood pub atmosphere for this place. During Happy Hour, from 4:30
to 7:30 p.m. Monday through Friday, half-priced appetizers render a
barbecue chicken pizza, an affordable treat at $4. Well drinks are $2.
The drink menu includes seven varieties of white wines and 11 reds.
But the real draw is the martini list. Six varieties exist, with enough
description of each to warrant a separate menu. The push was obviously
working, as many at the bar sipped from conical glasses.
The staff is courteous and efficient, if not solicitous. Clothed in
dressy attire -- dress shirts, ties, dark slacks and starched aprons for
the busboys, the bartender a virtual copy, but without the apron -- the
staff moved quickly from refilling drinks to discreet table clearing.
Two distinct seating areas divide the interior. The L-shaped bar offers
immaculate seating and provides a view of the bar’s considerable liquor
selection. Only a few of the tall, iron-framed chairs were taken by 6
p.m. This area draws lone patrons and coupled work colleagues, none of
whom seemed interested in sharing in their neighbors’ conversations.
There was no line at the bar, despite the scant number of seats. It’s
more like a continuous line of upscale tables for one.
Several booths and tables accommodate the rest of the crowd.
The bar also makes a token effort to cater to sports viewers. One
television set is perched high in a corner and the volume is kept low.
Despite a hot baseball rivalry on-screen, there was no cheering.
Most of the patrons are white males, although some families were dining.
Loretta Jones, 27, and her Newport Beach colleague were the only two
women at the bar, and seated themselves snugly at the corner near the
saxophonist.
“We’ve never been here before, but we work close by and decided to check
it out,” Jones said.
Both said they felt comfortable and would probably come back.
Inclusion in random conversation of strangers is not likely to occur at
Bistro 201, where the upscale setting screams “personal space” and even
the chairs at the bar offer tall backs and sinkable cushions as
barricades against interruption.
But for the lone diner or drinker, the reserved setting is inviting, said
Matt Gotkowski, 37, a retail leasing broker at a Costa Mesa company.
“It’s relaxing to come in here after work and unwind,” Gotkowski said.
“With these floor-to-ceiling windows facing the water, what more could
you want?”
Proximity to work drew him to the bar about six months ago, Gotkowski
said. Since then, he’s made a biweekly habit of using the bar as a place
to relax after work with a chardonnay or as the location of meetings with
colleagues.
But the bar’s privacy and solitude keeps Gotkowski coming back.
“If you raise your voice, everyone turns around,” he said.
FYI
WHAT: Happy Hour at Bistro 201
WHERE: 3333 W. Coast Highway, Newport Beach
WHEN: 4:30 to 7:30 Monday through Friday
PHONE: (949) 631-1551
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